Newsletter

 

Fulbright Forum - Newsletter of the Fulbright Academy - June 2009

Contents

Update - 2008 Nursing Conference in Doha

Update - 2010 Conference on Sustainability

Institutional profile - University of Denver, Colorado

Institutional profile - Barbados Community College

The New Face of the Fulbright Program

- Statistics on Student & Faculty Fulbright Grants


 

Nursing Conference in Doha - Selected Outcomes

In March 2008, the Qatar Foundation and FAST hosted a three-day meeting on Human Health & Environmental Challenges in the Middle East.  Nearly 100 people attended, including deans and leaders from Schools of Nursing and Health Programs in Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, Oman, Yemen, Scotland, California, and Washington. Staff and researchers from the US Embassy, the European Union, UNESCO and the World Health Organization also attended.

At the conclusion of the meeting, the Qatar Foundation committed itself to increased funding for epidemiology research and also expressed support for a regional network of nursing/health professionals in the Middle East. A meeting participant from San Francisco is at the American University in Beirut this year, on a Fulbright grant, and we hope the collaborations will continue.
We also have been told that the Doha meeting had an impact on discussions within the World Health Organization. 

A global group of nursing and health professionals will be exploring further activities to strengthen the nursing and health community in the Middle East, either at a meeting in Beirut or at a workshop in conjunction with our 2010 Annual Conference in San Francisco.  Interested participants should contact Eric Howard by replying to this newsletter.

Fifth Annual Conference - March 11-14, 2010

San Francisco, California will be the location for the 5th Annual FAST Conference. Sustainability-Shaping Tomorrow's Future Today" will feature presentations, discussions and working sessions with some 250 Fulbright scholars and scientists worldwide. We will be based at the Hilton (next to the Transamerica Tower/Pyramid). As with our other conferences, the program will include seminars, workshops and tours of science and research facilities in the area. On your calendar, please reserve March 11-14, 2010 (Thursday-Sunday).

 

"Sustainability" covers many topics, including energy, shelter & urban development, agriculture, information technology, manufacturing and human security.  Dozens of Fulbrighters from around the world have volunteered to further refine the program and the outcomes. Share your ideas by replying to this email message.


Subsidiary meetings at other locations around the world are also being planned. If you would like to get special updates or are likely to attend, please click here and send your contact information.


A gala opening night and special activities will recognize five years of FAST collaborations with other institutions - government agencies in several countries, foundations, dozens of NGOs, universities and corporations.  Click here for the sponsorship/registration pack.


Registration for the conference will be $450, with discounts of up to 66% for certain communities of alumni. Interested exhibitors and sponsors should contact FAST as soon as possible.  www.FulbrightAcademy.org.

 

Institutional Member Profiles

The University of Denver is the oldest and largest private university in the Rocky Mountain region, with 5,384 undergraduates, 6,004 graduate students and nearly 600 full-time appointed faculty members.  Fifty centers and institutes are based on the 125 acre campus, conducting specialized research and scholarship in many fields. The University of Denver often has 3-4 students/year receiving Fulbright grants. Fulbright staff at DU include Dr. Gregg Kvistad (Provost), Dr. Tom Farer (Dean, Korbel School of International Relations), Dr. Joan Winn (Professor of Management, Daniels College of Business) and many others at the university and its affiliated colleges, centers and institutes.  www.DU.edu. 

 

Barbados Community College is located near Bridgetown, the capital of Barbados. The College has several divisions which provide education and training to develop the human resources of this Caribbean island nation of 280,000 people. The Health Division, for example, offers associate degree programs to train pharmacists, medical laboratory technologists, nurses, environmental health inspectors, rehabilitation therapist and health information managers. The college also trains technicians to assist architects, building and construction engineers, electrical engineers, mechanical engineers and land surveyors, and it also offers majors in accounting, economics, law, and government and political studies. The head of the college, Gladstone Best, is one of some 200 citizens of Barbados who have been Fulbright Scholars. An attendee at the 2007 FAST conference in Panama, he studied education administration while on a Fulbright to the University of Louisville, Kentucky in 1989. More details can be found at www.bcc.edu.bb.

 

The New Face of the Fulbright Program
FAST is an independent organization started by the alumni of the Fulbright program, so we take a keen interest in how the program is evolving. At a recent meeting in Washington, the Council for International Exchange of Scholars distributed statistics for the five year period 2004-2008.  The numbers show the new face of the four largest segments of the Fulbright program
and help demonstrate that key recommendations in the 1997 "Fulbright at Fifty" report have been adopted.


One segment is US Students going abroad. 1126 Fulbright grants to students in 2004, growing to 1506 grants in 2008, with the top five receiving countries in 2008 being Germany, South Korea, Spain, China and Indonesia. 66% of recipients had a Bachelor’s degree, 16% had a Master’s, and 17% were working toward their PhD. Top activity to carry out while abroad: English Teaching Assistantships (507 of them in 2008, or one-third of the grants). This was followed by four science fields: Anthropology/ Sociology, Political Science, Public Health, and Biology. 38% are male; 62% are female, and 11% of the grants were awarded to African American and Hispanic American students.


For Foreign Students coming to the USA on a Fulbright, the number has grown from 1376 students in 2004 to 2182 in 2008. The top five sending countries in 2008 were Germany, Pakistan, Chile, Indonesia and Turkey. 57% had a Bachelor’s degree, 22% had a Master’s, and 19% were working toward their PhD. Top activity to carry out while in the USA: earning a professional degree, such as law, business administration, public administration and public health. This was followed by Sciences & Engineering, Social Sciences/Humanities, and Computer Science. 55% are male; 45% are female.


The US Scholar Program sends US faculty and professionals abroad. One-third of the US participants are going abroad to lecture, one-third lecture and do research, and one-third conduct research or give a short seminar. The number of grants has been steady over the five years: 820-830/year. The top receiving countries have been Germany, China, Japan, India and Ireland. The Fulbright Specialist Program offers short-term grants 2-6 weeks), and the top countries for these grants are Russia, South Africa, Chile, Israel and Peru. While the US Students are primarily female (62%), the US Scholars are primarily male (59%).


Visiting Fulbright Scholars are primarily in the USA to do research – 88.5% of them. The number of grantees ranged from 732 to 822 during the five year period. The top four countries sending Fulbrighters to the USA were China, Spain, Russia and Argentina. The top fields are nearly all in the sciences: Biological Sciences, Education, Engineering, Medical Sciences, followed by two social sciences - Economics and Political Science. The gender breakdown is identical to that of the US Scholars: 59% male, 41% female.


STEM (science, technology, engineering & math) fields were compared: 1998 versus 2008. In 1998, 20% of grants were in STEM fields; by 2007 it was 27%. Biological sciences rose from 19 grants in 1998 to 43 in 2008. Engineering went up from 19 to 32 grants. Fields such as Anthropology, Chemistry, Computer Science or IT, Environmental Sciences, Geology, Medical Sciences or Public Health, and Physics and Astronomy also showed gains.


The FAST definition of “science” includes “social sciences” as well as STEM fields. FAST also works with those who are interested in science and technology fields but their Fulbright was for a professional degree (such as business or law) or in an arts and humanities discipline. The personal and professional interests of student grantees from decades past may change. For example, the 22-year-old B.A. graduate who earned a Fulbright in 1972 in the humanities is now 59 years old and may be a middle-school science teacher, an executive in a high-tech firm or a senior civil servant in a government agency. 

 

About FAST:

FAST is a non-partisan, non-profit organization that serves Fulbright scholars and alumni  - executives, educators, and researchers worldwide. Our members and sponsors include individuals and institutions such as universities, corporations, government agencies and foundations.

Membership is open to institutions that support the FAST mission and to individual Fulbright scholars and alumni, hosts of scholars and friends of the Fulbright program.

FAST is an independent organization and is not affiliated with or funded by the Fulbright Exchange Program or the US Fulbright Association. Member contributions are critical to our continued success. Please learn more about the work of the Fulbright Academy by visiting our website: www.FulbrightAcademy.org

 

If you have questions about institutional or individual membership, please call FAST at 207-799-3098 or respond to this email.

 

Sincerely,

 

Eric Howard
Executive Director

 


 
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